KEY POINTS
  • GE announced Wednesday it will sell its jet leasing business to AerCap and use the proceeds to help pay off about $30 billion in debt.
  • The Boston-based conglomerate said it will also wind down the debt-laden GE Capital and shift its assets onto the industrial balance sheet.
  • The two steps are among CEO Larry Culp's most significant steps toward moving out of the finance business and focusing on the company's industrial roots.
Larry Culp, CEO, General Electric

General Electric's announcement Wednesday that it will sell its jet leasing business to rival AerCap and fold a substantially slimmed down GE Capital into its balance sheet is the latest indication that CEO Larry Culp is simplifying operations as it leans into its core industrial business.

GE Capital Aviation Services, or Gecas, is the largest asset of the company's finance arm, GE Capital, which nearly sunk the company during the financial crisis when it took on huge losses. The company has been whittling down Capital since then and Culp has sought to accelerate GE's exit from finance.